A blog by Kimberly Jensen, Professor of History and Gender Studies at Western Oregon University, with a focus on my research and writing projects in women's history. My current research is for a book project tentatively titled “Civic Borderlands: Oregon Women’s Claims to Citizenship and Civil Liberties, 1913-1924”

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The Women of Oregon Base Hospital 46 in the First World War

This page provides some additional resources on the women of Oregon Base Hospital 46 in the First World War. I'll be adding material as I continue to blog about their experiences.Here are the personnel rosters for the nurses and civilian employees published in Otis Buckminster Wight, Donald Macomber, and Arthur S.
Rosenfeld, eds., On Active Service with Base Hospital 46 U.S.A. March 20, 1918
to May 25, 1919 (Portland, Oregon: Arcady Press, 1920), 23-26.

Here is the complete text of Anne E. Schneider, "Answering the Call of the Wounded:
Bazoilles-sur-Meus to Soisson", Box 9, Base Hospitals, World War I,
Historical Records of the Army Nurses Corps Historical Data File,
1898-1947, Entry 10, Record Group 112, Records of the Office of Surgeon
General [Army], National Archives, College Park, Maryland.

Kimberly Jensen's Author Webpage

About Me

Kimberly Jensen received her Ph.D. from the University of Iowa in women’s and U.S. history and teaches history and gender studies at Western Oregon University.
She is the author of Oregon's Doctor to the World: Esther Pohl Lovejoy and a Life in Activism (University of Washington Press, 2012), Mobilizing Minerva: American Women in the First World War (University of Illinois Press, 2008) and coeditor, with Erika Kuhlman, of Women and Transnational Activism in Historical Perspective (Dordrecht: Republic of Letters, 2010).
She is working on a new book project tentatively titled “Civic Borderlands: Oregon Women’s Claims to Citizenship and Civil Liberties, 1913-1924”